I miss these guys
I miss these guys
They used ballistic gelatine dummies for a while, then decided that they weren’t a good model of most injuries, so had an episode where they designed a new dummy by buying human bones and breaking them to see how much force they could take, then picked out a material with similar properties (which surprisingly ended up being wood), and from then on, built fake skeletons to put in the gelatine dummies.
IIRC, the bones were bought from a shop that just sold human bones. They’d ended up there nominally because their previous owners’ wills had permitted it. E.g. lots of people want their skull to be used in productions of Hamlet, so drama groups often end up owning real skulls. I’m not sure whether Mythbusters was buying things from a general-use shelf or if they counted as medical science due to doing some kind of experiment - the US military counts even if they’re just using corpses for target practice.
m.youtube.com/watch?v=2F-XVXJI7Vk
8min in they test a human femur

Human remains are not humans. I think we obsess way too much about what happens after a human dies, mostly due to historic reasons (i.e. it makes sense to be afraid of dead bodies or consider them sacred, because interacting with them could make you sick).
If you make sure that the remains are not identifiable to anyone, why not use them for anything you like?
If anything I am more annoyed that at some point they stopped bothering about only buying corpses of pigs which died from natural reasons, and started supporting the meat industry more directly by buying from the regular butchers/supermarket. Even then, I’m only very slightly annoyed.
One of my favorites was when they were testing something about poison ivy.
They had to test every member of the cast and crew, and they only found one person who actually had a reaction to poison ivy!
I wasn’t allergic for many, many years - at least, I assume I was exposed to it over those decades, but I never got it. But, in the last two years, I’ve gotten it twice.
So, I would say: Be very careful even though you aren’t currently allergic.
Also, for anyone who has gotten it, this stuff (or equivalent) seems to work pretty well, as long as you do it right. It doesn’t clear it up immediately, but it definitely knocks it down some. It’s not cheap, but poison ivy irritation sucks.
I am horribly allergic to poison ivy, my ER doctor said the only worse case they had seen than mine was from someone who burned it in a bonfire and walked through the smoke, and I only had it rubbed on my pillow by terrible people.
As someone that has their skin rip open profusely from touching the stuff… Dawn dish soap, wash liberally, dry with paper towels or a towel you wash with all your clothes in hot water immediately after.
Then aluminum acetate dressings or similar astringent to pull out the weeping and cool the blisters. Don’t use antihistamine creams if you have open wounds, it will mess you up, stick with zinc oxide (calamine) and oatmeal baths to counter the drying.
Good advice, I assume. From what I understand, most soaps do not really do much to remove the chemical that irritates the skin and causes the rash, but I shouldn’t be surprised that Dawn would help.
In my case, the first time, I never saw it. The second time, I saw it and thought I was being careful (gloves) but still managed to get it on my arms. So my issue seems to be knowing WHEN I need to treat as though I’ve touched it.
Yeah, if I thought I even was near it, I know my timer is ticking, basically 40 minutes to get the oils off and clean up and I can minimize the impact to maybe a blister or 2 from some missed oil, it spreads really easily. And if you wipe it off while washing can be still spread.
Dawn is basically the king of oil removers, though you can also use alcohol wipes actually but you need to dispose of them faster than just showering with dish soap. Way cheaper than the branded stuff and usually on hand just missing moisturizing oils.
I would rather be needlessly clean and needing to moisturize than have poison ivy. But sometimes it just happens anyways.
Busting the ultimate myth…
For real though, I get a visceral awareness of mortality every time I think about Grant
I like Adam but he keeps saying something that rubs me the wrong way. He consistently says that Jamie was never the butt of the joke and he didn’t make fun of Jamie in a cruel way.
Meanwhile I was re-watching Mythbusters at the same time and Jamie repeatedly saying, on camera, that he is actively bothered by certain mocking jokes that Adam would make and he wishes he would stop it but he won’t.
Felt really strange hearing Adam say that minutes after I finished an episode where Jamie was genuinely bothered.
From one perspective I can see how Adam would honestly say he never “meant it like that”, but he does seem a little stubborn and boomerish in that aging gen-x sort of way that tends to miss the point.
I feel like Jamie and Adam are both like the fun uncle who can be too much, but you don’t ever get too annoyed with, in very different ways.
He also makes stuff, on camera, often trying and learning new techniques in the process. And failing, and learning from those failures, and teaching the viewers in the process.
Or brings in prop experts and shows off their goodies.
Or invites other crafty youtubers to promote them and learn more about whatever they specialise in.
It is pretty experimental.
His sheer glee when Evan and Katelyn revealed to him the wonders of modern UV-set resin, for instance, was wonderful and contagious. You could see the wheels turning on his head thinking about the things he could use it for.
Alligators absolutely will chase you. Saying they won’t is dangerous.
Yes they’re lazy any don’t just do it willy nilly and it’s uncommon as they’d rather swim away or something but it absolutely happens. Source: grew up in that part of the South with redneck dumbasses everywhere and have seen it and the results from failing to get away.
Straight. Gators top out about 9-10 miles per hour but they can’t maintain it long at all and that’s at their absolute fastest. Run straight away from them and you’ll likely put enough distance to be fine.
Oh. They can also climb trees, which is the other method of escape sometimes suggested so ignore that one too. They’re not the quickest and it’s more common with baby gators, but they absolutely can get up in that tree with you if they choose to.
Thanks!
The skunk generally doesn’t want to spray. It takes time for the skunk to make it and will generally only use it if it feels like its in serious danger.
I was out riding my bike once at night and I saw a skunk in front of me. I braked as hard as I could. I managed to stop about a meter from it. Little one hissed and I grabbed my bike and crossed the street.
Anyway, I figure anything you could do to convince a skunk to spray you would border on/straight up be animal abuse.
Yeah it was something along those lines.
They were speechless when the first elephant turned away, which is a pretty strange reaction for that crew. Makes me chuckle just thinking about it. They were completely floored, you can almost hear what they were thinking: “This is a dumb myth and why are we wasting our time… … … what just happened?”
Hyneman’s take was that the elephant appeared downright scared of the mouse.
